nixpkgs-suyu/pkgs/development/python-modules/generic/default.nix
Peter Simons 93b18ceb30 pkgs/development/python-modules/generic: parameterize build/install command
The generic 'buildPythonPackage' function used to use the build/install command
"easy_install" unconditionally. That didn't work for python-numpy, for
instance, because the package wants "setup.py" run with additional parameters
to determine the fortran compiler of choice. The newly introduced function
argument 'installCommand' allows to implement this. By passing that parameter,
the default build command can be overridden.

svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=22786
2010-07-28 13:05:04 +00:00

101 lines
3.3 KiB
Nix

/* This function provides a generic Python package builder. It is
intended to work with packages that use `setuptools'
(http://pypi.python.org/pypi/setuptools/), which represents a large
number of Python packages nowadays. */
{ python, setuptools, makeWrapper, lib }:
{ name, namePrefix ? "python-", src, meta, patches ? []
, installCommand ? ""
, doCheck ? true, checkPhase ? "python setup.py test"
, postInstall ? ""
, ... } @ attrs:
let
defaultInstallCommand = ''easy_install --prefix="$out" .'';
# Return the list of recursively propagated build inputs of PKG.
recursiveBuildInputs =
pkg:
[ pkg ] ++
(if pkg ? propagatedBuildNativeInputs
then lib.concatLists (map recursiveBuildInputs
pkg.propagatedBuildNativeInputs)
else []);
in
python.stdenv.mkDerivation (
# Keep extra attributes from ATTR, e.g., `patchPhase', etc.
attrs
//
(rec {
inherit src meta patches doCheck checkPhase;
name = namePrefix + attrs.name;
buildInputs = [ python setuptools makeWrapper ] ++
(if attrs ? buildInputs then attrs.buildInputs else []);
propagatedBuildInputs = [ setuptools ] ++
(if attrs ? propagatedBuildInputs
then attrs.propagatedBuildInputs
else []);
buildPhase = "true";
# XXX: Should we run `easy_install --always-unzip'? It doesn't seem
# to have a noticeable impact on small scripts.
installPhase = ''
ensureDir "$out/lib/${python.libPrefix}/site-packages"
echo "installing \`${name}' with \`easy_install'..."
export PYTHONPATH="$out/lib/${python.libPrefix}/site-packages:$PYTHONPATH"
${if installCommand == "" then defaultInstallCommand else installCommand}
${postInstall}
'';
postFixup = ''
# Wrap scripts that are under `{s,}bin/' so that they get the right
# $PYTHONPATH.
for i in "$out/bin/"* "$out/sbin/"*
do
if head -n1 "$i" | grep -q "${python}"
then
echo "wrapping \`$i'..."
# Compute a $PATH prefix for the program.
program_PATH=""
${lib.concatStrings
(map (path:
''if [ -d "${path}/bin" ]
then
program_PATH="${path}/bin'' + "\$" + ''{program_PATH:+:}$program_PATH"
fi
'')
(lib.concatMap recursiveBuildInputs propagatedBuildInputs))}
wrapProgram "$i" \
--prefix PYTHONPATH ":" \
${lib.concatStringsSep ":"
([ "$out/lib/${python.libPrefix}/site-packages" ] ++
(map (path: path + "/lib/${python.libPrefix}/site-packages")
(lib.concatMap recursiveBuildInputs
propagatedBuildInputs)))} \
--prefix PATH ":" "$program_PATH"
fi
done
# If a user installs a Python package, she probably also wants its
# dependencies in the user environment (since Python modules don't
# have something like an RPATH, so the only way to find the
# dependencies is to have them in the PYTHONPATH variable).
if test -e $out/nix-support/propagated-build-inputs; then
ln -s $out/nix-support/propagated-build-inputs $out/nix-support/propagated-user-env-packages
fi
'';
}))